A judge with a peccadillo ended up tying Marin Audubon’s name to the demise of 50 years of environmental regulations.
Victoria Schlesinger is the editor in chief of Bay Nature.
Avroh Shah, Young Leader Mirella Ramos, Environmental Educator Susan Schwartz, Community Hero Annie Burke, Conservation ...
I think it got something!” Avroh Shah says. Out at the Baylands Nature Preserve, the sweep of sky over these shimmering ...
Dick, pioneering research from Monterey Canyon and beyond is transforming how we understand the life of an enigmatic ocean ...
Bay Nature and two Moss Landing Marine Lab scientists join for a public conversation and Q&A session about the fire at Vistra Moss Landing Power Plant, which started January 16th and burned for three ...
Somewhere in the Bodie Hills, in predawn darkness on a section of dirt road that looks pretty much the same as any other spot on every other dirt road east of the Sierra Nevada, biologist Katrina ...
Before it was a city, much of San Francisco was a dunescape. Nearly a third of it was covered in sand. Western winds swept the sand into heaps and piles—one 80-foot dune rested in the future Union ...
The Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law provide billions of dollars for nature. How is that changing the Bay Area? And how do we know if it’s money well spent? Bay Nature ...
On any one of her routine treks in Deadman Gulch, Nadia Hamey will move downhill through thick vegetation in the San Vicente Redwoods, a swath of protected redwood forest in the Santa Cruz Mountains ...
ON A WARM SEPTEMBER AFTERNOON IN 1962, a 14-year-old boy named Jim Carlton scrambled down through thick brush onto the exposed muddy shoreline of Adams Point on Lake Merritt. The small beach was quiet ...
Once, not so long ago, there lived a fish in the Galapagos Islands. Its name was Azurina eupalama, the Galapagos damsel; it was not particularly different from any other small rocky reef fish.